Neukom Institute Announces Winners Of Speculative Fiction Awards

HANOVER, N.H. – May 16, 2018 – The Neukom Institute for Computational Science at Dartmouth College has awarded the inaugural 2018 Neukom Institute Literary Arts Awards in Speculative Fiction. The awards go to three works of fiction that demonstrate that the future can be imagined as something other than a slick, techno-dystopia.

In the category of debut speculative fiction, the award goes to “Best Worst American” by Juan Martinez(Small Beer Press, 2017). The co-winners of the inaugural prize in the open category are “Central Station” by Lavie Tidhar (Tachyon Publications, 2016) and “On the Edge of Gone” by Corinne Duyvis(Amulet/Abrams, 2016).

“We are proud to have a list of award winners that features such thoughtful artistic visions of the future, both near and far,” said Dan Rockmore, director of the Neukom Institute. “We all wrestle with the uncertainty of the future, that is what makes speculative fiction such an important and necessary genre, and that is what makes each of these works so special.”

Among the award winners is an adult novel set in a future version of Tel Aviv, a young-adult novel with an autistic protagonist on a ship destined to depart Earth, and a short story collection set largely in the surrealist landscape of Las Vegas. With all of the differences in narrative approach, the books share a willingness to imagine a future containing love and acceptance rather than solitary heroism against dystopian collapse.

“These books prioritize valuable human relationships as prods to improvement of technologically and scientifically complex futures,” said Maria Dahvana Headley, the principal judge for the 2018 awards program. “The works are warm and hopeful, and they point to the true nature of science, one in which solving human problems and failings is the goal, not shrinking the need for human engagement.”

The award winners each receive a $5,000 honorarium and will participate in an event at Dartmouth that will include a panel on the speculative fiction genre.

Lavie Tidhar, co-winner in the open category for “Central Station,” said: “Writing Central Station, I was finally able to put into form many of the ideas on the future – of people, of machines, of communication – that occupied me since first loading a command line prompt, and since the first time I heard the siren call of a modem. I’m honored to be among the inaugural recipients of the Neukom Institute Literary Arts Awards.”

Corinne Duyvis, co-winner in the open category for “On the Edge of Gone,” said: “This was a highly personal book for me to write, and for it to receive an honor of this magnitude is thrilling both professionally and personally.”

Juan Martinez, winner in the debut author category for “Best Worst American,” said: “I’m thrilled, humbled, and tremendously happy. I’m a huge fan of the writers on the shortlist, and it was a surprise to find myself in there; it’s an even bigger surprise to be among the winners.”

The Neukom Institute Literary Arts Awards program was announced last year as an open competition to honor and support creative works around speculative fiction. The inaugural playwriting award announced earlier this year was given to Jessica Andrewartha for her play, “Choices People Make.” Andrewartha’s play navigates a near-world future dominated by artificial intelligence, but that also struggles with the real-world issues faced in today’s society.

In addition to the top book honors awarded to Martinez, Duyvis and Tidhar, the Neukom Institute recognized eight other books by placing them on the inaugural award shortlist.

“All of the books recognized by the awards embrace the potential for a future involving the flesh-and-blood skills of empathy and tenderness, while still expanding on technical capacity,” said Headley.

A call for submissions for the 2019 Neukom Literary Arts Awards will be announced later this year.

“The best speculative fiction is brave enough to crystallize the possibilities of the future into beautiful and human stories that we can live with in our imaginations before we actually have to live in them. I can’t wait to see what next year’s participants dream up,” said Rockmore.

Founded in 1769, Dartmouth is a member of the Ivy League and offers the world’s premier liberal arts education, combining its deep commitment to outstanding undergraduate and graduate teaching with distinguished research and scholarship in the arts and sciences and its three leading professional schools: the Geisel School of Medicine, Thayer School of Engineering and Tuck School of Business.

About The Neukom Institute for Computational Science at Dartmouth College

In an age in which all forms of knowledge and experience can find their way to the computer, computation is central to many of the investigations and innovations that range across the humanities, arts, and sciences. The mission of the Neukom Institute for Computational Science at Dartmouth College is to support this broad view of computational investigation across Dartmouth’s campus, and to catalyze creative thought throughout the Arts and Sciences, Engineering, Medicine, and Business, for undergraduates, graduate students and faculty.